If you take a peek at our blog, you’ll notice that metadata and community are the most frequently used categories. This is not a coincidence – ommunity is central to everything we do at Crossref. Our first-ever Metadata Sprint was a natural step in strengthening both. Cue fanfare!. And what better way of celebrating 25 years of Crossref?
We designed the Crossref Metadata Sprint as a relatively short event where people can form teams and tackle short problems. What kind of problems? While we expected many to involve coding, teams also explored documenting, translating, researching—anything that taps into our open, member-curated metadata. Our motivation behind this format was to create a space for networking, collaboration, and feedback, centered on co-creation using the scholarly metadata from our REST API, the Public Data File, and other sources.
Dado que Crossref celebra su 25Âş aniversario este año, nos gustarĂa destacar algunas de las regiones activas y comprometidas en nuestra comunidad global.
The Crossref Nominating Committee invites expressions of interest to join the Board of Directors of Crossref for the term starting in January 2026. The committee will gather responses from those interested and create the slate of candidates that our membership will vote on in an election in September.
Expressions of interest will be due Monday, June 9th, 2025
The record registration form can be used to deposit metadata for your records. You do not need any knowledge of XML to use it. You can download your records to your local machine and re-upload them to the form later to make edits to the metadata. You can also save partial records to be used as templates in the future.
The form currently supports journal articles and grants, but we are planning to add support for additional record types in future.
How to use the record registration form
Start at the record registration form and enter your Crossref account credentials. You can choose to create a new record or upload a record you’ve already created using this form. If this is the first time you’ve used this form, you’ll choose New Record.
Create a new record
Select the type of record you wish to create, then add the metadata associated with your record. Some fields are required to be filled out in order to submit your record, while others are optional. If you are submitting a journal article, you can find links to our documentation in the form for more information on what each field means.
At any point while filling out the form, you can use the download button to save your record to your local computer for future edits. The record will download as a .json file, which is named automatically: for grant records, it will be named the funder name and award number; for journal article records, it will be named after the journal’s e-ISSN (or p-ISSN if no e-ISSN is available) and article title. This file can be loaded back into the form at a later date to make changes to your record.
Submit your record
Click Submit at the bottom of the form once you have filled out the required fields, as well as any optional metadata you want to deposit. The submission will be made immediately and a success message will appear on the screen. You can also download the record from this page, or choose to start another submission. If you have submitted a journal article record, you can choose to repeat the process for another article in the same journal and/or journal issue, which will pre-fill the appropriate metadata for you so you don’t have to re-enter it.
If there is a problem with your submission, you will see an error message appear instead. Go to the documentation for tips on how to troubleshoot common errors from our deposit system.
Load a saved record
If you’ve used the record registration form before to create a record, you can upload your saved copy to make edits and re-deposit the metadata. Start at the record registration form and choose Load Record. Select the appropriate .json file from your computer and click Open. Note: the record you load must be a .json file previously downloaded from the record registration form.
Once the form is loaded, you can make edits to your record and submit your record to update the metadata. You can also download a new version to your local machine to repeat the process later.
Create a template
You can partially complete a form and download it for use as a template in the future. For example, if you register multiple grants, your depositor information (name, email address) and funder information (funder name, funder ID) are likely to be the same across all submissions. So you might complete just those parts of the form, download the record, and upload it each time you need to submit a new grant record.
Page owner: Lena Stoll | Last updated 2025-March-02